Fidelity Funding of California, Inc. v. Reinhold

79 F. Supp. 2d 110, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23672, 1997 WL 1180170
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedOctober 22, 1997
Docket1:95-cv-03130
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 79 F. Supp. 2d 110 (Fidelity Funding of California, Inc. v. Reinhold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Funding of California, Inc. v. Reinhold, 79 F. Supp. 2d 110, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23672, 1997 WL 1180170 (E.D.N.Y. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

ROSS, District Judge.

Plaintiff, Fidelity Funding of California, Inc. (“Fidelity” or “FFOC”) has moved for partial summary judgment against defendants Isaac Reinhold, Mendel Kotlarsky, Michael Mendlovic, Masel Supply Company Corp. (“Masel”), Herbert Greenfield, Ciporah Greenfield, Thrifty Cosmetics & Sundries, Inc. (“Thrifty”), Joe Klein Dental Supplies & Equipment, Inc. (“Klein Dental”), United Talmudical Academy of Boro Park (“UTA”), Irving Goldstein, and Josef Goldstein 1 on causes of action under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961 et seq. (“RICO”) and for fraud. Additionally, Fidelity has moved for partial summary judgment (liability only) against defendant Marshall Shaw on its cause of action for conversion, and for summary judgment against Reinhold on a cause of action for breach of guaranty, and against Masel and Thrifty on its cause of action for dishonored checks. 2 Simultaneously with this opinion, the court is issuing a companion opinion granting a stay of the lawsuit as against defendant Michael Mendlovic. Accordingly, the court will not decide Fidelity’s motion against Mendlovic, but grants in part and denies in part the remainder of Fidelity’s summary judgment motion for the following reasons.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Because plaintiff has moved for summary judgment against less than all of the defendants, the following summary of uncontested facts provides only the background necessary to understand the resolution of the motions currently pending before the court.

The Agreements

Plaintiff Fidelity, wholly owned by plaintiff Fidelity Funding Financial Group, Inc. (previously dismissed from the case), is an asset-based lender that provides interest-bearing advances under revolving lines of credit to small- and medium-sized businesses. On January 12, 1995, Fidelity entered into Purchase and Sale Agreements *114 (the “Agreements”) with Micro Innovation Computer Center, Inc. (“Micro”) and Max-um Systems, Inc. (“Maxum”) whereby Fidelity would finance Micro and Maxum by advancing them money owed to them by their “Account Debtors,” the persons or entities obligated on the accounts for which Fidelity advanced money to Micro or Maxum. The Agreements had two-year terms, Agreements, ¶ 12.4, and provided for Micro and Maxum to submit the invoices of Account Debtors to Fidelity. Fidelity would then buy the invoices from Micro and Maxum for eighty percent of the value of Micro’s and Maxum’s acceptable accounts receivable and would place the remaining twenty percent in a reserve account until the Account Debtors paid the amount of the invoice to Fidelity. Affidavit of Michael D. Haddad, Exh. 3. To facilitate these payments from the Account Debtors, in January 1995, Fidelity mailed some Account Debtors, including Masel, a letter informing them that Fidelity would be financing Micro’s invoices and that they should remit payment to Fidelity rather than to Micro. Isaac Reinhold, President and sole shareholder of Micro and Maxum, served as a guarantor for Micro and Max-um.

The Fraudulent Scheme

Fidelity contends, and defendants do not deny, that Micro submitted to them fictitious invoices for Masel, Thrifty, UTA, and certain other Account Debtors. There is substantial evidence that the Account Debtors paid Fidelity for these invoices with money that Micro and Maxum provided either directly or through intermediaries. The cycle of Account Debtors paying for fraudulent invoices with money provided by Micro, which it in turn received from Fidelity for subsequent invoices, continued until Fidelity discovered the fraud in mid-July 1995.

The Defendants’ Fraudulent Activities

Micro submitted twenty-four fictitious invoices from Thrifty. Various representatives of Thrifty, including a woman who identified herself as “Sylvia,” falsely confirmed the fraudulent invoices. Thrifty paid Fidelity with money that Micro supplied either directly or through an intermediary. By way of example, on April 24, 1995, Micro wrote two checks for a total of $74,000 payable to “Joe Dental & Co.” Those checks were endorsed by a stamp indicating that they were to be deposited in the account of Klein Dental, which is also owned by the Greenfields. See Affidavit of Record Custodian for Metropolitan State Bank, Exhs. D-7, D-8. Also on April 24, 1995, Thrifty issued a check for $73,926 to Micro. Affidavit of Jim B. Johnson, Exh. B-34. Then, on April 27, 1995, Klein Dental transferred $74,000 to Thrifty. Affidavit of Custodian of Records of Chase Manhattan Bank, Exh. B-4.

Another example: On May 30, 1995, Micro wired $33,176 directly to Thrifty. Metropolitan State Bank Aff., Exh. D-9, a transfer corresponding with Thrifty’s May 25, 1995 payment of $33,250 to Fidelity. Once these transfers were complete, Micro had effectively reimbursed Thrifty almost the entire amount that Thrifty had paid to Fidelity for fraudulent invoices. Thrifty’s Vice President Herbert Greenfield signed each of the Klein Dental checks made out to Thrifty and each of the Thrifty checks made out to Fidelity.

Fidelity’s claims against Masel arise from actions that began prior to Fidelity’s signing of the Agreements. As part of its routine investigation of Micro, Jo Ann Jer-nigan of Fidelity spoke by telephone with Michael Mendlovic, Vice President of Ma-sel, who falsely represented that certain Masel invoices signified valid and legitimate purchases Masel made from Micro. Additionally, after Fidelity and Micro signed the Agreements, Mendlovic falsely confirmed in another phone call with Jim Johnson of Fidelity the bona tides of those false invoices. Other Masel representatives also falsely confirmed a number of other invoices that were fictitious. In total, Micro submitted thirty-five fictitious invoices from Masel, and Michael Mendlo-vic signed ten checks on behalf of Masel *115 that purported to constitute payment for many of these invoices. While Masel was sending checks to Fidelity to pay for the fictitious invoices, Micro was providing Masel with corresponding amounts of money.

Fidelity’s claims against UTA involve twenty-two false invoices. Micro directly and indirectly provided the money that UTA paid to Fidelity for these fictitious invoices. The' signature stamp of Irving Goldstein, the president of UTA, appears on five UTA checks, mailed to Fidelity in payment for the fictitious invoices. One of these five checks was made payable directly to Fidelity. Johnson Aff., Exh. C-35. The record also establishes that Irving Goldstein himself served as an intermediary for a number of money transfers from Micro to UTA used to pay Fidelity for UTA’s fictitious invoices. Further, the record shows that Irving Goldstein’s son, Josef Goldstein, received money from Micro used to pay UTA’s false invoices. Josef Goldstein, president and sole owner of BSD Acquisitions, Inc. (“BSD”), signed two checks to Fidelity on the account of BSD for payment of UTA’s invoices.

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Bluebook (online)
79 F. Supp. 2d 110, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23672, 1997 WL 1180170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-funding-of-california-inc-v-reinhold-nyed-1997.